These candle-stick holders probably belonged to a Sufi, also known as darwish in Persian (from which we get the English term ‘dervish’). The darwish would dress differently from the rest of society, wearing woollen garments and carrying ‘kashkul’ (begging bowls), made of metal or coconut shells. The Sufi (mystic), in his ‘Path’, must undertake voluntary poverty and asceticism. Poverty (faqr) should be more of a spiritual nature (absence of desire for material wealth) than actual physical poverty. Many Sufis who pursued this concept, did renounce their worldly belongings. These candle-stick holders may have been used in a darwish’s home.